학술논문

Mapping malaria incidence using routine health facility surveillance data in Uganda
Document Type
article
Source
BMJ Global Health. 8(5)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Vector-Borne Diseases
Prevention
Rare Diseases
Malaria
Infectious Diseases
Aetiology
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
2.4 Surveillance and distribution
3.2 Interventions to alter physical and biological environmental risks
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Incidence
Uganda
Cross-Sectional Studies
Mosquito Control
Health Facilities
malaria
geographic information systems
epidemiology
Health services and systems
Public health
Language
Abstract
IntroductionMaps of malaria risk are important tools for allocating resources and tracking progress. Most maps rely on cross-sectional surveys of parasite prevalence, but health facilities represent an underused and powerful data source. We aimed to model and map malaria incidence using health facility data in Uganda.MethodsUsing 24 months (2019-2020) of individual-level outpatient data collected from 74 surveillance health facilities located in 41 districts across Uganda (n=445 648 laboratory-confirmed cases), we estimated monthly malaria incidence for parishes within facility catchment areas (n=310) by estimating care-seeking population denominators. We fit spatio-temporal models to the incidence estimates to predict incidence rates for the rest of Uganda, informed by environmental, sociodemographic and intervention variables. We mapped estimated malaria incidence and its uncertainty at the parish level and compared estimates to other metrics of malaria. To quantify the impact that indoor residual spraying (IRS) may have had, we modelled counterfactual scenarios of malaria incidence in the absence of IRS.ResultsOver 4567 parish-months, malaria incidence averaged 705 cases per 1000 person-years. Maps indicated high burden in the north and northeast of Uganda, with lower incidence in the districts receiving IRS. District-level estimates of cases correlated with cases reported by the Ministry of Health (Spearman's r=0.68, p